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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

New jobless filings skyrocket

Claims jump to 406,000 as firms trim work forces in face of grim economic news

By JEANNINE AVERSA Associated Press

WASHINGTON – The number of newly laid off people filing claims for unemployment benefits bolted past 400,000 last week as companies trimmed their work forces to cope with a slowing economy and fallout from a collapsed housing market.

The Labor Department reported Thursday that the number of new applications filed for these benefits rose by a seasonally adjusted 34,000 to 406,000 for the week ending July 19.

That matched the level seen in late March. The last time claims were higher was after the devastation of the Gulf Coast hurricanes in mid-September 2005. Then, they spiked to 425,000.

The new snapshot of layoffs was worse than economists were forecasting. They were expecting claims to rise to 375,000 according to the consensus estimate of Wall Street economists surveyed by Thomson/IFR.

A year ago, new claims were much lower – at 308,000. The rise in claims underscores the deterioration in employment conditions.

The White House, while noting that layoff filings can bounce around from week to week, acknowledged that the job market needs to be bolstered.

“The bottom line is that unemployment, while relatively low by historical standards, is still higher than we would like, and we continue to take action to return to strong job creation,” said White House press secretary Dana Perino.

Meanwhile, the number of people continuing to draw unemployment benefits dipped slightly to 3.1 million for the week ending July 12, the most recent period for which that information is available. However, a year ago, that figure stood at 2.54 million.

Several companies that announced job cuts in July are: IndyMac Bancorp Inc., Chrysler LLC, Pilgrim’s Pride and American Axle.

Nervous employers, chafing under high energy prices and uncertain about the economy’s direction and their own sales prospects, have cut jobs for six months in a row. That has left total job losses at 438,000 so far this year, the government reported earlier this month.

The unemployment rate didn’t budge at 5.5 percent in June, after zooming in May by the most in two decades. The unemployment rate is expected to climb to 6 percent or higher by early next year.